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Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1972-04-06

Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1972-04-06, page 01

. -BAV Burr,eAx?96T:
■■"4
Sftffi ServingColumbus, 'Xentral" a^^
ifJTsTi-'
VOL. 50 NO. 14
APRIL 6, 197? - NISAN 22
•mt.4 H Anetfisa arilnhbUnh
TEL AVIV (WNS) — In a specially organized operation, 500 immigrants from all over the world were brought to Israel just before the holiday, so that they could be settled in the Holy Land in time for Passover. Hotels throughout the country were booked to capacity by local and.foreign tourists, traffic jammed therr/oads, and all buses and train equipment were in'operation. An offer by the Reform synagogue in Tel AyiYiVtd*6lda seder in an immigrant hostel in Jaffa was:rBjected by Rabbi Mordechai' Kirshblum of the Jewish)Agency.
WASHINGTON (WNS) — Postal authorities have "disposed of" 20,000 pounds of matzos which had been mailed to the Soviet Embassy here for transmission to Soviet Jews. The mail campaign,, organized by B'nai B'rith's Pennsylvania, Delaware and West Virginia Region, was meant to dramatize the plight of Soviet Jewry. The Embassy refused to accept the packages which hatUpiled up in the basement of the main postoffice here. Teamsters Local 701 of North Brun¬ swick N.J. had offered to pick up and deliver the matzos to charitable organizations. Sen,, Harrison A. Williams, Jr. (D., N.J.) is asking Post Office officials for a "full explanation" of why the matzos were "destroyed."
Golden Gifts Ball Saturday
Winding Hollow Country Club will be the scene of the Annual Golden Gifts Ball,.- this Saturday evening at 6:30 p.m. The affair" which will begin_with a.cocktail party, will feature the appearance of Dr. Aryeh Nesher, per¬ sonal representative of the Prime Minister of Israel. Dr. Nesher will speak at the dinner meeting. -
The Golden Gifts function honors all members of the community who have or will make a minimum -.con¬ tribution of $1,000 to the Regular and - Israel Emergency Fund Cam¬ paigns of the United Jewish Fund and Council.
According to Gordon B. Zacks, General Campaign Chairman, and Ernest Stern, Advance Gifts Chairman, an ■- unusually large attendance is anticipated Saturday
Observance ForAllArouhd World
(Copyright, 1972, JTA, Inc.)
, NEW YORK (JTA) - The infirm, the poor and Jews away from; home were not- forgotten in the planning for observance of this year's Passover.. Special arrangements were made by Jewish communities in the United States, .Israel and other communities in the free world to assure such Jews .the opportunity -to share withtheir fellow-Jews the traditional • seder ob¬ servance. One thousand of New York City's'■; indigent Jewish -elderly observed Passover at seders through arrangements by the Jewish Association of Services for the Aged and the Com¬ mission on Synagogue
GORDONZACKS
evening, to hear Dr. Nesher., arid to respond to the appeal to' meet the full needs of humanitarian services in Israel and elsewhere.
"Just as the heroic citizens of,. Israel have, time and again, stunned the wortd. with their courage, so the Jews of America must
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 7)
Hussein Discusses Plans For Peace Settlement With Israel
WASHINGTON (JTA) — Jordan's King , Hussein suggested'March 29 that Jerusalem be the capital of both Israel and ''the, Palestinian portion of Jot-. daii". as "a unified, open city" in'the context of a final settlement with Israel. .The ; remark, made to'newsmen during ; his visit to Washington to see President Nixon, reversed Hussein's opposition to a sharing of the Holy City. The Arabs must control the eastern sector, he said, but.,''beyond that'-.vyet are read/;— we ;are. operi:; minded — on^se^ijig !h'owi,we can make Jeni$lej^Vofice7 and for all/the City of . Peace." The monarch rej e c t e d i n - ternationalization, as has Israel. And as has Israel, he denied having met with Israeli leaders, although he commented cryptically that
the Israeli reaction to his Jerusalem plan 'has been* "violently negative." Hussein twice chose not to reject suggestions from newsmen that a separate Jordanian-Israeli peace'was possible. .
T Earlier, the White House refused to take any position on Hussein's announced plan for a United Arab Kingdom . embracing the! Israeli- occupied West Bank of the Jordan River, bu't left an impression that» President Nixon is not unsympathetic to it. MeeUng^jth. the, press a fter the '.ji.Bjes'$eht had conferred with HuSsem for so minutes,, PressSecretary Ronald Ziegler said: "We are not commenting on the substance of the plan at all. This is an internal matter. I'm not willing to enter into it — one way or another."
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 5)
Relations of the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies of New York.
Lawrence \ Buttenweiser.. Federation president said the program was one of many planned annually by the - Federation's 130 hospitals, homes for the aged, recreational centers -and other agencies to serve Jews of all ages during Passover. The Passover program included Federation, agencies in Westchester' and , Long Island. The Federation's Joint Passover Association helped more than 5000 needy and aged Jews and Hasidic families, witli monetary grants to buy Passover food .and oilier re¬
quirements for the traditional seder.
In ., cooperation with Federation's New Yo.irk Society for the Deaf. adult deaf and deaf-blind Jews joined in a seder April 2. sponsored by the Hebrew Association for the Deaf and conducted in sign language. JASA officials, said special .attention was paid-'to the limbless, wheelchair bound and otherwise disabled elderly with special tran¬ sportation facilities to take them to and from the seders.
Among the celebrations of the Hillel unit at the University of California at Los Angeles, one of 38 area campuses assisted by the Los Angeles Hillel Council, home hospitality was arranged for out-of-town students for the first seder night and throughout Passover. HiUel's "Matzo Mobile" was on the UCLA campus on April 3 and 4 to distribute Passover lunches prepared by Hillel students.
Hillel Extension sponsored a variety of Passover events on the 33 campuses it serves
in the. Los Angeles area. Members of the Hillel unit at Pierce College was joined"by;, students from the. hew > Poorpark College campus for an "ecology walk" along the coastline, cleaning refuse from the beach. ,'■• - .7 The Chaplaincy service of the Board of Rabbis of Southern California, held seders* in 2b hospitals and penal ' institutions' and provided matzos and other Passover foods and "gift packages to some 1600 patients and inmates in Southern California in¬ stitutions. The Jewish Family Service of Los Angeles provided special* allowances for Passover needs, including dishes and clothing, for newly-settled immigrants.
Nursery school pupils in Jewish Centers Association member centers baked matzos and held miniature seders. The JCA reported also that many of the six *• centers conducted com¬ munity services, par¬ ticularly for single persons.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 7) ,
■»;w
The Melton Vocational High School at Bat Yam is
. featured in, the one hour special "Israel's Second
Defense" which will be shown AprrH2 at 8:00 p.m. on
WBNS-TV. The school was founded by Samuel Melton,
a native of Columbus.
Documentary Investigates Education In Israel
Goldfarb To Receive Brotherhood Award
i"
,i,
•trffj,
Ne¬
llie determination of a young country to develop superior education for all its people will be portrayed Wednesday, Apr. 12, as WBNS-TV and City National Bank present' a one hour special documentary en¬ titled "Israel's Second Defense."
The one hour color presentation, to be aired at 8 p.m., investigates education in Israel and the extensive measures used in formal and vocational educatrS'rj
programs.
Next to defense, the Israeli government spends more on education than any other national priority.
City National sponsored a special WBNS documentary team to film the Israeli people and their country. The three-man team left for Israel Jan. 25 and spent ,10 days in the Holy Land filming all aspects of Israeli education and the deter¬ mination of the government
' ! (CONTINUED ON PAGE SJ . * •
Memotfal^ryices This Sunday At Beth Jacob
Jews throughout the world will commemorate,-Sunday, Apr. 9 arid Monday, Apr.. 10 as Yom Hashoah
VHagivurah, in memory of the six million Jews who died in the Nazi holocause. These days 'were chosen' because they coincide with the uprising in the Warsaw Ghetto, which ; took place-, from Aprv^to May 31,1943. 'This7battle lasted for over forty-two days and it saw a group outnumbered and out armed defend themselves against the barbaric Ger¬ man Army. Confusion reigned among the German officers -in charge of the liquidation of the Warsaw
Ghetto. -To them, this defense was unbelievable and therefore, they could hot decide Upon the method for attacking the ghetto.' v 7
After brutal fighting three, thousand Jews were killed during the first three days and of the remaining three thousand Jews only a hand- full escaped and many are alive today in Israel.'
At the Beth Jacob Synagogue for"the last ten years a special service for the lighting of six memorial candles has been conducted. Mr. Ben Grinblatt. this year's , chairman, and himself a survivor of tbe
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 7)
j.The, fifth annual Agudas Achini ' Brotherhood "Flowers for the Living Award" will be presented to Mr. Louis R. Goldfarb on Tuesday evening, April' 11, at 8 p.m. in the Main Sanctuary of Agudas ■ Achim Synagogue. 2767 East Broad Street.
Mr. Goldfarb was born and reared in Columbus; he is a graduate of Fulton Elementary and Central High Schools. •■ Private tutoring was the source of his early religious training. He is the recipient of a diploma from Yeshiva University Adult Education Program for having successfully completed their course of study. Knowledge of the word of God is an important factor in Lou Goldfarb's life' and he eagerly pursues his thirst for' Jewish learning. He gained his understanding in the home of his parents, Isaac and Golda Goldfarb, ' and in the Agudas Achim Synagogue. His spiritual tbeing'is built on the three pillars of Jewish life - the school, the -synagogue and we home. These ideals, both theoretical and practical, he .
|, puts to use in his service to God and to humanity on the personal and communal level.
Mr. Goldfarb has served Agudas Achim Congregation; and its Brotherhood in many1 areas; he has been a
■member of the'Board of Trustees of Agudas Achim for a quarter of a century
LOUIS It. GOLDFARB
and served this office as chairman and vice chair¬ man. He has headed many committees during his years ' of leadership including the House Committee, personnel Committee, Cantorial and Rabbinic Committees, among others. He has been active in Heritage House, the United Jewish Fund, Bonds for Israel, The Excelsior Club, The Columbus Torah Academy, The Columbus Hebrew School, The Zionist Organization of America, B'nai B'rith and President of B'nai B'rith Bowling League. He is presently serving on the. Board of Management of the Central Y.M.C.A., and was a * former Board Member,, of> Camp Wilson,- 'sponsored ' <by T.M.C.A., and the Red Cross . Blood Donor Program.
Over the years, no matter what the effort was, whether on the personal or communal level, Louis' Goldfarb has
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 51

. -BAV Burr,eAx?96T:
■■"4
Sftffi ServingColumbus, 'Xentral" a^^
ifJTsTi-'
VOL. 50 NO. 14
APRIL 6, 197? - NISAN 22
•mt.4 H Anetfisa arilnhbUnh
TEL AVIV (WNS) — In a specially organized operation, 500 immigrants from all over the world were brought to Israel just before the holiday, so that they could be settled in the Holy Land in time for Passover. Hotels throughout the country were booked to capacity by local and.foreign tourists, traffic jammed therr/oads, and all buses and train equipment were in'operation. An offer by the Reform synagogue in Tel AyiYiVtd*6lda seder in an immigrant hostel in Jaffa was:rBjected by Rabbi Mordechai' Kirshblum of the Jewish)Agency.
WASHINGTON (WNS) — Postal authorities have "disposed of" 20,000 pounds of matzos which had been mailed to the Soviet Embassy here for transmission to Soviet Jews. The mail campaign,, organized by B'nai B'rith's Pennsylvania, Delaware and West Virginia Region, was meant to dramatize the plight of Soviet Jewry. The Embassy refused to accept the packages which hatUpiled up in the basement of the main postoffice here. Teamsters Local 701 of North Brun¬ swick N.J. had offered to pick up and deliver the matzos to charitable organizations. Sen,, Harrison A. Williams, Jr. (D., N.J.) is asking Post Office officials for a "full explanation" of why the matzos were "destroyed."
Golden Gifts Ball Saturday
Winding Hollow Country Club will be the scene of the Annual Golden Gifts Ball,.- this Saturday evening at 6:30 p.m. The affair" which will begin_with a.cocktail party, will feature the appearance of Dr. Aryeh Nesher, per¬ sonal representative of the Prime Minister of Israel. Dr. Nesher will speak at the dinner meeting. -
The Golden Gifts function honors all members of the community who have or will make a minimum -.con¬ tribution of $1,000 to the Regular and - Israel Emergency Fund Cam¬ paigns of the United Jewish Fund and Council.
According to Gordon B. Zacks, General Campaign Chairman, and Ernest Stern, Advance Gifts Chairman, an ■- unusually large attendance is anticipated Saturday
Observance ForAllArouhd World
(Copyright, 1972, JTA, Inc.)
, NEW YORK (JTA) - The infirm, the poor and Jews away from; home were not- forgotten in the planning for observance of this year's Passover.. Special arrangements were made by Jewish communities in the United States, .Israel and other communities in the free world to assure such Jews .the opportunity -to share withtheir fellow-Jews the traditional • seder ob¬ servance. One thousand of New York City's'■; indigent Jewish -elderly observed Passover at seders through arrangements by the Jewish Association of Services for the Aged and the Com¬ mission on Synagogue
GORDONZACKS
evening, to hear Dr. Nesher., arid to respond to the appeal to' meet the full needs of humanitarian services in Israel and elsewhere.
"Just as the heroic citizens of,. Israel have, time and again, stunned the wortd. with their courage, so the Jews of America must
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 7)
Hussein Discusses Plans For Peace Settlement With Israel
WASHINGTON (JTA) — Jordan's King , Hussein suggested'March 29 that Jerusalem be the capital of both Israel and ''the, Palestinian portion of Jot-. daii". as "a unified, open city" in'the context of a final settlement with Israel. .The ; remark, made to'newsmen during ; his visit to Washington to see President Nixon, reversed Hussein's opposition to a sharing of the Holy City. The Arabs must control the eastern sector, he said, but.,''beyond that'-.vyet are read/;— we ;are. operi:; minded — on^se^ijig !h'owi,we can make Jeni$lej^Vofice7 and for all/the City of . Peace." The monarch rej e c t e d i n - ternationalization, as has Israel. And as has Israel, he denied having met with Israeli leaders, although he commented cryptically that
the Israeli reaction to his Jerusalem plan 'has been* "violently negative." Hussein twice chose not to reject suggestions from newsmen that a separate Jordanian-Israeli peace'was possible. .
T Earlier, the White House refused to take any position on Hussein's announced plan for a United Arab Kingdom . embracing the! Israeli- occupied West Bank of the Jordan River, bu't left an impression that» President Nixon is not unsympathetic to it. MeeUng^jth. the, press a fter the '.ji.Bjes'$eht had conferred with HuSsem for so minutes,, PressSecretary Ronald Ziegler said: "We are not commenting on the substance of the plan at all. This is an internal matter. I'm not willing to enter into it — one way or another."
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 5)
Relations of the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies of New York.
Lawrence \ Buttenweiser.. Federation president said the program was one of many planned annually by the - Federation's 130 hospitals, homes for the aged, recreational centers -and other agencies to serve Jews of all ages during Passover. The Passover program included Federation, agencies in Westchester' and , Long Island. The Federation's Joint Passover Association helped more than 5000 needy and aged Jews and Hasidic families, witli monetary grants to buy Passover food .and oilier re¬
quirements for the traditional seder.
In ., cooperation with Federation's New Yo.irk Society for the Deaf. adult deaf and deaf-blind Jews joined in a seder April 2. sponsored by the Hebrew Association for the Deaf and conducted in sign language. JASA officials, said special .attention was paid-'to the limbless, wheelchair bound and otherwise disabled elderly with special tran¬ sportation facilities to take them to and from the seders.
Among the celebrations of the Hillel unit at the University of California at Los Angeles, one of 38 area campuses assisted by the Los Angeles Hillel Council, home hospitality was arranged for out-of-town students for the first seder night and throughout Passover. HiUel's "Matzo Mobile" was on the UCLA campus on April 3 and 4 to distribute Passover lunches prepared by Hillel students.
Hillel Extension sponsored a variety of Passover events on the 33 campuses it serves
in the. Los Angeles area. Members of the Hillel unit at Pierce College was joined"by;, students from the. hew > Poorpark College campus for an "ecology walk" along the coastline, cleaning refuse from the beach. ,'■• - .7 The Chaplaincy service of the Board of Rabbis of Southern California, held seders* in 2b hospitals and penal ' institutions' and provided matzos and other Passover foods and "gift packages to some 1600 patients and inmates in Southern California in¬ stitutions. The Jewish Family Service of Los Angeles provided special* allowances for Passover needs, including dishes and clothing, for newly-settled immigrants.
Nursery school pupils in Jewish Centers Association member centers baked matzos and held miniature seders. The JCA reported also that many of the six *• centers conducted com¬ munity services, par¬ ticularly for single persons.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 7) ,
■»;w
The Melton Vocational High School at Bat Yam is
. featured in, the one hour special "Israel's Second
Defense" which will be shown AprrH2 at 8:00 p.m. on
WBNS-TV. The school was founded by Samuel Melton,
a native of Columbus.
Documentary Investigates Education In Israel
Goldfarb To Receive Brotherhood Award
i"
,i,
•trffj,
Ne¬
llie determination of a young country to develop superior education for all its people will be portrayed Wednesday, Apr. 12, as WBNS-TV and City National Bank present' a one hour special documentary en¬ titled "Israel's Second Defense."
The one hour color presentation, to be aired at 8 p.m., investigates education in Israel and the extensive measures used in formal and vocational educatrS'rj
programs.
Next to defense, the Israeli government spends more on education than any other national priority.
City National sponsored a special WBNS documentary team to film the Israeli people and their country. The three-man team left for Israel Jan. 25 and spent ,10 days in the Holy Land filming all aspects of Israeli education and the deter¬ mination of the government
' ! (CONTINUED ON PAGE SJ . * •
Memotfal^ryices This Sunday At Beth Jacob
Jews throughout the world will commemorate,-Sunday, Apr. 9 arid Monday, Apr.. 10 as Yom Hashoah
VHagivurah, in memory of the six million Jews who died in the Nazi holocause. These days 'were chosen' because they coincide with the uprising in the Warsaw Ghetto, which ; took place-, from Aprv^to May 31,1943. 'This7battle lasted for over forty-two days and it saw a group outnumbered and out armed defend themselves against the barbaric Ger¬ man Army. Confusion reigned among the German officers -in charge of the liquidation of the Warsaw
Ghetto. -To them, this defense was unbelievable and therefore, they could hot decide Upon the method for attacking the ghetto.' v 7
After brutal fighting three, thousand Jews were killed during the first three days and of the remaining three thousand Jews only a hand- full escaped and many are alive today in Israel.'
At the Beth Jacob Synagogue for"the last ten years a special service for the lighting of six memorial candles has been conducted. Mr. Ben Grinblatt. this year's , chairman, and himself a survivor of tbe
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 7)
j.The, fifth annual Agudas Achini ' Brotherhood "Flowers for the Living Award" will be presented to Mr. Louis R. Goldfarb on Tuesday evening, April' 11, at 8 p.m. in the Main Sanctuary of Agudas ■ Achim Synagogue. 2767 East Broad Street.
Mr. Goldfarb was born and reared in Columbus; he is a graduate of Fulton Elementary and Central High Schools. •■ Private tutoring was the source of his early religious training. He is the recipient of a diploma from Yeshiva University Adult Education Program for having successfully completed their course of study. Knowledge of the word of God is an important factor in Lou Goldfarb's life' and he eagerly pursues his thirst for' Jewish learning. He gained his understanding in the home of his parents, Isaac and Golda Goldfarb, ' and in the Agudas Achim Synagogue. His spiritual tbeing'is built on the three pillars of Jewish life - the school, the -synagogue and we home. These ideals, both theoretical and practical, he .
|, puts to use in his service to God and to humanity on the personal and communal level.
Mr. Goldfarb has served Agudas Achim Congregation; and its Brotherhood in many1 areas; he has been a
■member of the'Board of Trustees of Agudas Achim for a quarter of a century
LOUIS It. GOLDFARB
and served this office as chairman and vice chair¬ man. He has headed many committees during his years ' of leadership including the House Committee, personnel Committee, Cantorial and Rabbinic Committees, among others. He has been active in Heritage House, the United Jewish Fund, Bonds for Israel, The Excelsior Club, The Columbus Torah Academy, The Columbus Hebrew School, The Zionist Organization of America, B'nai B'rith and President of B'nai B'rith Bowling League. He is presently serving on the. Board of Management of the Central Y.M.C.A., and was a * former Board Member,, of> Camp Wilson,- 'sponsored '